Author/Authors :
Valery I. Levitas، نويسنده , , Kasra Momeni، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Solid–solid image phase transformations via nanometer-size intermediate melts image within the SS interface, hundreds of degrees below melting temperature, were predicted thermodynamically and are consistent with experiments for various materials. A necessary condition for the appearance of IMs, using a sharp interface approach, was that the ratio of the energies of SS and solid–melt image interfaces, image, were >2. Here, an advanced phase-field approach coupled with mechanics is developed that reveals various new scale and interaction effects and phenomena. Various types of IM are found: (i) continuous and reversible premelting and melting; (ii) jump-like barrierless transformation to IMs, which can be kept at much lower temperature even for image; (iii) unstable IMs, i.e. a critical nucleus between the SS interface and the IM. A surprising scale effect related to the ratio of widths of SS and SM interfaces is found: it suppresses barrierless IMs but allows IMs to be kept at much lower temperatures even for image. Relaxation of elastic stresses strongly promotes IMs, which can appear even at image and be retained at image. The theory developed here can be tailored for diffusive phase transformations, formation of intergranular and interfacial phases, and surface-induced phase transformations.
Keywords :
Phase transformation , Phase field , Intermediate melt , Ginzburg–Landau